Fisher Et Ux. v. Allegheny County

188 A. 196, 324 Pa. 471, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 544
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1936
DocketAppeal, 155
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 A. 196 (Fisher Et Ux. v. Allegheny County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher Et Ux. v. Allegheny County, 188 A. 196, 324 Pa. 471, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 544 (Pa. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

In the widening, relocation and construction of State Highway Route No. 72, a part of the property of George E. Fisher and his wife situate in Richland Township, Allegheny County, was appropriated. The property consisted of a farm of 174.8 acres and was bisected by the Butler-Plank Road. This road was relocated, becoming State Route No. 72. The right-of-way of the new road within plaintiffs’ farm is entirely without the lines of the old right-of-way and is partly through a “30-foot-deep cut” on plaintiffs’ land. Of plaintiffs’ farm a strip 60 feet in width and 2,000 feet in length was appropriated for highway purposes. There was also an appropriation of ground for slope purpose and for a change in the channel of a small stream flowing through the farm. *474 Plaintiffs claim that by reason of the relocation of the road, involving the “cut” above mentioned, the farm is no longer suitable, as it had been theretofore, for highway gasoline stations and restaurants, that the rentals they had formerly received from the proprietors of such places of business on their farm was no longer obtainable, that the flow from a spring of water on the farm had been so diverted by the relocation of the road as to convert a few acres of what had been good pasture land into “swamp land” and that by the diversion of traffic from the old road to the new road plaintiffs’ furniture business, including the sale of antiques, had been destroyed, all of which was to their substantial pecuniary detriment.

After the appointment of viewers and a hearing, plaintiffs were awarded damages in the sum of $3,048. An appeal from this award was taken by plaintiffs and after trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $16,000, and $3,040 detention money, a total of $19,040. Defendant filed a motion for a new trial, averring, inter alia, that the verdict was excessive and that the trial judge erred in the exclusion of certain testimony.

The first assignment of error is based on the court’s sustaining plaintiffs’ objection to an offer of testimony. Plaintiffs’ witness, Brown, a real estate expert, had been asked on cross-examination if he could tell of any piece of property which sold in Richland Township in 1934 that was comparable to plaintiffs’ property, and which sold for $475 an acre (the figure at which he had placed the fair market value of the Fisher farm immediately prior to the relocation of the section of the Butler-Plank Road through that farm). The witness replied: “Yes, I know of a farm that sold for more than that, the farm adjoining the Garraux farm, which was sold by the Garraux Estate to Alfred Hufschmidt . . . for more than $400 an acre. ... I think it was made in 1930.” Plaintiffs’ witness, Wright, also a real estate expert, was *475 asked by defendant’s counsel on cross-examination about the Hufschmidt farm. He stated that he (the witness) sold this farm to one McGilvrey for Hufschmidt, in, he thought, the year 1925 or 1926. Plaintiffs’ witness Shannon, another real estate expert, testified on cross-examination that the Hufschmidt farm was sold in the year 1926 for $416 an acre and that it contained 60 acres. “For the purpose of affecting the credibility” of these three witnesses, defendant offered in evidence the deed or exemplification of deed from Garraux to Hufschmidt to show that the farm contained 73 acres and was sold on September 26, 1921, at $300.09 per acre. This was objected to “as not the best proof with which to impeach the credibility of a witness.” The objection was sustained.

This assignment is defective in that it violates Rule 22 of this court, reading as follows: “Each error relied on must be specified particularly and by itself. If a specification embraces more than one point, or refers to more than one bill of exceptions, or raises more than one distinct question it may be disregarded.” This rule serves a salutary purpose and is not to be lightly disregarded. See Tate-Jones & Co., Inc., v. Union Elec. Steel Co., 281 Pa. 448, 458, 126 A. 813.

It is not clear from defendant’s offer that the deed offered related to this identical sale the Avitnesses had testified to. All of the Avitnesses referred to a sale of the Hufschmidt farm not in 1921 but several years later. There was evidence that this farm had been sold three or four times subsequent to 1921. Witness Brown testified that the farm “has been sold and traded three times since then [1932] and the farm can be bought for lots less money now on account of the old road being left in front of it.” Brown did testify on cross-examination to a sale of a farm “adjoining this Garraux farm.” The sale he said was made by the “Garraux Estate,” not by Mr. Garraux, “to Albert Hufschmidt.” He thought the sale was made in 1930 and it was “for more than $400 *476 an acre.” The deed offered in evidence to impeach this witness and witnesses Wright and Shannon was dated September 26, 1921, and was between Edna Y. Garraux and Mary E. Garraux, both unmarried, parties of the first part, and Alfred Hufschmidt, party of the second part. It therefore does not appear with sufficient definiteness that the sale Brown testified to as having been made by the “Garraux Estate” in 1930 was the identical sale made by Edna and Mary Garraux in 1921. For all that appears the property might have, during the nine-years-period between 1921 and 1930, been again conveyed to those who were later represented by the term “Garraux Estate.” The sale in 1930, testified to by witnesses Wright and Shannon, was so clearly not the sale which the deed evidenced that the deed could not have served as an impeachment of their credibility. None of the witnesses whose testimony was the subject of the attempted impeachment by the 1921 deed had mentioned a sale of the Garraux farm in that year. If they had specifically mentioned such a sale and had given an erroneous figure as the sale price, the trial judge should have overruled the objection to the offer of the deed for the purposes for which it was offered. This court said in Henkel v. Wabash, Pittsburgh Terminal R. R. Co., 213 Pa. 485, 62 A. 1085, that a party against whose interest a witness has testified may show that the opinion expressed is valueless as evidence because it is founded on a misapprehension of the facts, and that this rule does not offend against the rule that “the proper test of the value of land taken under the right of eminent domain is its market value and that this value is not to be ascertained by proof of particular sales but by the general selling price of land similarly situated.”

The second assignment of error is based on the court’s sustaining plaintiffs’ objection to defendant’s counsel’s asking defendant’s witness Sharp, if he was “acquainted with the sale from the Garraux Estate to Albert Hufschmidt in the year 1930” of a 60-acre property which *477 plaintiffs’ witness Brown had testified brought “a little over $400 per acre.” This was evidently a preliminary question and could well have been allowed. The trial judge’s ruling apparently did the defendant no harm, for counsel was then permitted to ask: “Do you know the selling price of the Garraux Estate to Albert ITufschmidt?” The witness answered that he did and that the sale was made on September 26, 1921, and the area was ten acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 A. 196, 324 Pa. 471, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-et-ux-v-allegheny-county-pa-1936.